Category Archives: Fort Scott

Rock Ballet Recital: See Area Dancers Strut their Stuff

Kristin Gorman. Submitted photo.

Kristin Lewis Gorman is the owner and director of Rock Ballet, a Fort Scott dance instruction studio.

Her dance instruction recital is at 7:30 p.m. on June 24 and 25 at the Bicknell Family Center for the Arts, on the campus of Pittsburg State University.

From the Rockballet recital in 2021. Submitted photos.

Gorman said the dancers are all getting very excited right about now.

She is as well, but last years recital is giving her confidence that this one too, will be a great performance for the dancers.

“Having one recital under my belt, I’m feeling a tiny bit less frantic at this point,” she said.

“Our dress rehearsal is Wednesday, June 22 and the shows will be Friday and Saturday, June 24 and 25 at 7:30 p.m.” she said.

 

At the Rockballet debut recital,June 2021, at the Bicknell Center.

 

Rockballet Dancers. Submitted photo.

“I would love to get our online- reserved seating- ticket link out there to everyone in Fort Scott because last year so many people told me after the fact that they hated that they didn’t even know about the show,” she said. “My fault totally, I just ran out of time.”

“It is super easy to purchase tickets using the link,  as it is all done online through Tutu Tix,” she said.

Click below to purchase tickets for the event:

https://buy.tututix.com/rockballet

http://www.therockballet.com

Backstage at the 2021 recital. Submitted photos.

Her email is [email protected] and the website is therockballet.com

Her mission: “Building confident, graceful, dynamic dance-athletes from the ground up”

Click Here To Register For Dance Classes

Rockballet Dancers, the Broadway Babies,  on stage in 2021. Submitted photos.

Friday Night Free Concert: Steve Fortenberry

Ralph Carlson introduces the Friday Night Concert musicians May 2019.

This week’s Friday Night Concert will be presented by local musician Steve Fortenberry. The one-hour concert begins at 7 p.m. at the Heritage Park Pavilion at First and Main streets. Fortenberry plays light classical and Christian songs on guitar. Ralph Carlson will join him on guitar for the last half of the show

 

“Steve is an accomplished musician with unique guitar stylings, using special effects,” concert-series organizer Ralph Carlson said. “We are happy to welcome Steve back to the pavilion and we‘re looking forward to an enjoyable evening of great guitar music from him. Bring a friend and join us.”

 

The shows, sponsored by the Fort Scott Area Chamber of Commerce, are free and open to the public. Dave Oas and Jim Butler provide the sound each week. Due to limited seating, attendees are encouraged to bring lawn chairs.

 

In the event of inclement weather or excessive heat temps, the concert will be moved to the Loading Dock at Common Ground Coffee Co., 12 E. Wall Street.

FS City Commission Minutes of June 7

Minutes are unapproved until the meeting.

CITY OF FORT SCOTT

CITY COMMISSION MEETING

 

         Minutes of June 7th, 2022                          Regular Meeting #11

 

The regular meeting of the Fort Scott City Commission was held June 7th, 2022 at 6:00 p.m. in the City Commission Meeting Room at City Hall, 123 S. Main Street, Fort Scott, Kansas.

 

ROLL CALL:

 

Commissioners K. Harrington, T. Van Hoecke, S. Walker, and M. Wells were present with President J. Jones presiding.

 

INVOCATION: City Commissioner, Matthew Wells, said a prayer asking God for guidance for the City, our Government and City officials.

 

AUDIENCE IN ATTENDANCE:  Travis Shelton, Jason Dickman, Brad Matkin, Jackson Tough, Kevin Allen, Megan Smith, Dallas Smith, Ann Rawlins, David Saker, Claudia Wheeler, Jody Hoener, Clayton Miller, Steve Anthony, Harold Martin, Rob Harrington, Emily Bolt, Tayton Majors, and representing the press Tammy Helm, Editor, Fort Scott Tribune.

 

PROCLAMATIONS/RECOGNITIONS:  State Farm Insurance 100th Anniversary Proclamation – President Jones read a proclamation proclaiming June 7th, 2022 as State Farm Day in the City of Fort Scott.  He called upon the residents of the City to observe this day by demonstrating what being a good neighbor is all about through acts of kindness and making people feel welcome.

 

Josh asked that Rob Harrington be added under Appearance.

 

Election of President of the City Commission – Josh said that the next item is to elect a President of the Commission.

 

  1. Van Hoecke said that he has checked into it and the State Statutes on replacing the President position as well as the Mayor position. He would like to replace both positions. He cited Kansas State Statutes and the City ordinances and said that we can take this time to put new faces on the Commission in leadership positions.

 

  1. Van Hoecke made a motion to take nominations for Mayor at this time since there are no guidelines in place for the President to automatically move up to the Mayor position. Shane Walker seconded.

 

  1. Jones states that K.S.A. 13-513 sets the guidelines on how to fill the Mayor’s position and read the following: “When any vacancy shall happen in the office of Mayor by death, resignation, absence from the City, removal from office, refusal to qualify or otherwise, the president of the council for the time being shall exercise the duties of the office of Mayor with all rights, privileges, and jurisdiction of the Mayor until such vacancy is filled or such disability is removed, or in the case of such vacancy, other than a temporary absence of disability, the president of the council shall become Mayor. Thereupon the council shall elect from its membership a new president of the council.  Whenever a vacancy shall occur in the office of councilman, the governing body shall appoint an elector of the word where the vacancy occurs to be councilman for the balance of the unexpired term.”

 

  1. Van Hoecke said that he was looking at K.S.A. 12-184a which states: “Form of government continued. A) A city shall continue to operate under its current form of government whether established at an election, or by adoption of a charter ordinance or ordinance until such time that the City’s form of government is changed as provided by law. B) All existing ordinances and charter ordinances relating to a city’s form of government, except those provisions relating to the time if city primary and general elections, shall remain in effect until amended or repealed by such city.”

 

  1. Jones said that the protocol set in the past has been that the president moves up to Mayor and cited a situation where this occurred in the past. He said that he was just pointing out what has happened in the past.

 

  1. Van Hoecke said that a liaison needs to be appointed to the Lake Advisory Board to replace Kevin Allen.

 

  1. Van Hoecke said that the current ordinance needs changed.

 

City Attorney said that you can change your current ordinance.  There is an ordinance to replace a Commissioner.  The replacing of the President to the Mayor position has not come up since he has been City Attorney.  He said they can change the ordinance however they wish.

 

Back to the previous motion to take nominations for Mayor at this time, roll call was taken with T. Van Hoecke, S. Walker, M. Wells, and K. Harrington voting aye.  J. Jones abstained.  Motion carried 4-1.

 

APPROVED TO TAKE NOMINATIONS FOR MAYOR.

 

  1. Jones moved to nominate Katie Harrington for Mayor. M. Wells seconded. M. Wells and J. Jones voted aye.  S. Walker and T. Van Hoecke voted no.  K. Harrington abstained.

 

  1. Jones asked the City Attorney if the abstained vote counts as an affirmative vote and he said it did.

 

APPOINTED KATIE HARRINGTON AS MAYOR.

  1. Walker moved to nominate Matthew Wells to serve as the Lake Advisory Board liaison. J. Jones seconded. J. Jones, T. Van Hoecke, K. Harrington, and S. Walker voted aye.  M. Wells abstained.  Motion carried 4-1.

 

APPOINTED MATTHEW WELLS AS THE LIASION OF THE LAKE ADVISORY BOARD.

 

  1. Walker moved to nominate Tim Van Hoecke as President of the Commission. M. Wells seconded. All voted aye.

 

APPOINTED TIM VAN HOECKE AS PRESIDENT OF THE CITY COMMISSION.

CONSENT AGENDA:

 

  1. Approval of minutes of the regular meeting of May 17th, 2022 and special meeting of June 1st, 2022.

 

  1. Approval of Appropriation Ordinance 1313-A totaling $583,514.00.

 

  1. Request to Pay – Nuss & Farmer – April Invoice – $2,155.00

 

  1. Request to Pay – HDR Engineering – River Intake Project – $7,124.16

 

  1. Request to Pay #2 – Nowak Construction Co., Inc. – Manhole 148 Project – $94,116.15

 

  1. Consideration to Pay – Brightly Software – $7,677.09

 

  1. Harrington asked that the payment to Bourbon County R.E.D.I. be removed from the Appropriation Ordinance as she has a conflict.

 

  1. Walker moved to approve the Consent Agenda with the removal of the Bourbon County R.E.D.I. payment. J. Jones seconded. All voted aye.

 

APPROVED CONSENT AGENDA WITH THE REMOVAL OF THE PAYMENT TO BOURBON COUNTY R.E.D.I.

 

Bourbon County R.E.D.I. Payment of $5,416.67:

 

  1. Jones moved to approve the payment to Bourbon County R.E.D.I. T. Van Hoecke seconded. J. Jones, S. Walker, M. Wells, T. Van Hoecke voted aye.  K. Harrington abstained.  Motion carried 4-1.

 

APPROVED PAYMENT TO BOURBON COUNTY R.E.D.I. IN THE AMOUNT OF $5,416.67.

 

Public Comment:

(Sign up required.  Comments on any topic not on the agenda and limited to 5 minutes per person, at Commission discretion)

 

Ann Rawlins – Ms. Rawlins appeared before the Commission regarding the Old Fort Genealogical Society.  She is the librarian.  She has an exciting project regarding the Katy Railroad project.  They had an exhibit in Texas, and they want to move it to Fort Scott.  Documents to be housed are accounting records, maps, annual reports, etc.   They need to be available to the public.   Their museum will donate these items to a research library.  They would like to take over the lower half of Memorial Hall for these items.   She asked them to consider their putting Memorial Halls repairs on the front burner.

 

  1. Van Hoecke said that he thinks all of the Commission would like the building repaired.

 

Steve Anthony – Mr. Anthony asked permission to use the tennis court lights at the Golf Course on July 30th for their Special Olympics tournament.

 

  1. Wells moved to allow the Special Olympics tournament to use the tennis court lights at the Golf Course for their event on July 30th, 2022. J. Jones seconded. All voted aye.

 

APPROVED TO ALLOW THE SPECIAL OLYMPICS TOURNAMENT TO USE THE TENNIS COURT LIGHTS AT THE GOLF COURSE FOR THEIR EVENT ON JULY 30TH, 2022.

 

Old Business:

 

  1. Consideration of Impound Yard for Codes vehicles – City Manager said that he passed out information to the Commission regarding an impound yard for Codes vehicles and Land Bank vehicles that are acquired. We need a place to hold them and companies to pick them up.  He has had three interested parties.  These vehicles would be picked up at no cost and held at no cost, but they would get the vehicles once the titles are acquired in payment of the holding and picking up and hauling.  The City would have to comply with the State of Kansas Salvage Control Act.  He asked that the vehicles would not be held in a blight area where they could be viewed.   The regulations would need to be gone over with the interested party.

 

  1. Jones said that this needs to be looked at yearly and make sure all interested parties are considered.

 

Clayton Miller said that they want to make sure they are up to City codes on the property for the salvage yard.

 

City Manager said that we can get an ordinance in place also.  It will take a little while to get this developed and started.

 

  1. Wells moved to moved to move forward with an impound yard for the City of Fort Scott for Codes vehicles. J. Jones seconded. All voted aye.

 

APPROVED TO MOVE FORWARD WITH AN IMPOUND YARD FOR THE CITY OF FORT SCOTT FOR CODES VEHICLES.

 

Appearances:

 

Dallas Smith – Wedding reception venue request – Dallas and Megan Smith appeared before the Commission to ask for the use of the Airport hangar for a wedding reception and for the City to waive the alcohol consumption on this property for this event on October 29th, 2022.  This would be from 12:00 p.m. to 12:00 a.m.

 

  1. Van Hoecke moved to allow Dallas Smith to use the hangar at the Fort Scott Municipal Airport for the wedding reception on October 29th, 2022 and to waive the alcohol consumption on the property for this date. S. Walker seconded. All voted aye.

 

APPROVED TO ALLOW DALLAS SMITH TO USE THE HANGAR AT THE FORT SCOTT MUNICIPAL AIRPORT FOR THE WEDDING RECEPTION ON OCTOBER 29TH, 2022 AND TO WAIVE THE ALCOHOL CONSUMPTION ON THE PROPERTY FOR THAT DATE.

 

Jody Hoener – Healthy Bourbon County Action Team – Consideration of Memorandum of Understanding – 3rd Street Park upgrades – Downtown Arch placemaking – Jody stated that in their packets is the Memorandum of Understanding.   She had the City Attorney review it and he gave a suggestion or two which she included in the MOU.  There is $70,000 in grant funds in the 3rd Street project and $70,000 in grant funds for the Downtown Arch project.  She also asked for approval for the Pledge.

 

  1. Wells moved to accept the Memorandum of Understanding between the Healthy Bourbon County Action Team and the City of Fort Scott to outline the implementation of the 3rd Street Park project and Downtown Arch project and the pledge. J. Jones seconded. All voted aye.

 

APPROVED THE MEMORANDUM OF UNDERSTANDING BETWEEN THE HEALTHY BOURBON COUNTY ACTION TEAM AND THE CITY OF FORT SCOTT TO OUTLINE THE IMPLEMENTATION OF THE 3RD STREET PARK PROJECT AND THE DOWNTOWN ARCH PROJECT AND THE PLEDGE.

 

Jody gave an update on the T-Mobile grant project also to the Commission.  They are meeting with Fort Scott National Historic Site personnel on this project.

 

Lake Advisory Board Representative – Harold Martin, Lake Advisory Board member, informed the Commission that their Board met on June 4th, 2022, and they would like the City to wait two to three years before the sale of any additional Lake property.  There were complications with the sale of the first four lots.  The Lake Advisory Board would like a Comprehensive Plan established before the sale of any additional lake lots.   Their Board voted that all boat licenses be shown on the actual vessels.  All boat licenses expire on December 31st of each year.  They should be displayed on the right side of the vessel.   They asked for a change in this ordinance to reflect this.

 

Two recommendations were made at their meeting in May which remains unanswered.  The Board recommended that legal counsel determine whether Lake Fort Scott falls under the State of Kansas Boating Regulations.   Their board has not heard a reply.

 

City Attorney said that he and the City Manager discussed this.  The Lake Patrol Officer always consults the State and complies with what they require.

 

Mr. Martin said that their other issue is regarding anchors and proper maintenance and protocol for the anchors and for the City to invest in what is needed.  This should not be designated to the Lake Patrol Officer but a City employee.  He asked for a status on this.

 

City Manager said that he would look into the cost of that.

 

  1. Jones apologized for the swimming ropes not being in place for Memorial Day. The fish feeders were not up yet either.

 

Mr. Martin said that they are up now.

 

Rob Harrington – Rob introduced his new grant writer Emily Diebolt, and the new intern for Bourbon County R.E.D.I, Tayton Majors.  They each stood up and gave a little of their background.

 

Rob said that he prepared a policy and procedures and handed the City Attorney a copy.

 

He said a year ago he stood before the Commission and addressed a couple of items on behalf of a couple of businesses.  He addressed the road by Peerless and El Charro.  The road needs to be repaired.

 

City Attorney is working on this issue to get easements on this road known as 25th Street.  He has quit claim deeds from all property owners except for Peerless.

 

Rob will check with Peerless on this.

 

Rob also brought up the ditch in front of Niece Products and if the road is City or County property.  There is a water issue there.  The ditch needs cleaned out.

 

Shane said that the roads are the County, but the ditch is the City’s.

 

City Manager will check into this issue.

 

Public Hearings:

 

  1. Jones moved to open the Public Hearing at 7:06 p.m. T. Van Hoecke seconded. All voted aye.

 

OPENED PUBLIC HEARING AT 7:06 P.M.

 

6:00 p.m. – Notice of Hearing of de-annexation of the property more commonly known as 2142 Jayhawk Road –

 

Katie asked if there was any public comment and there was none.

 

  1. Wells said that the City promised to get them water some time ago. He cannot find any information on this issue. He said that there are two houses close in proximity that do have City water.

 

  1. Wells moved to table this de-annexation at this time until more information can be obtained. T. Van Hoecke seconded. All voted aye.

 

TABLED THE DE-ANNEXATION FOR 2142 JAYHAWK ROAD AT THIS TIME.

 

  1. Jones made a motion to close the public hearing at 7:12 p.m. M. Wells seconded. All voted aye.

 

CLOSED PUBLIC HEARING AT 7:12 P.M.

 

New Business:

 

  1. Acceptance of K.D.O.T. Grant – Horton Street – $949,000.00 – Resurfacing, new sidewalks, crosswalks, and ADA ramps on Horton Street between 6th Street and 18th Street – City Manager said that the City was awarded this grant.

 

  1. Wells moved to accept the K.D.O.T. Grant for Horton Street in the amount of $949,000.00. S. Walker seconded. All voted aye.

 

APPROVED K.D.O.T. GRANT FOR HORTON STREET IN THE AMOUNT OF $949.000.00.

 

  1. Consideration of Change Order #1 – Nowak Construction Co., Inc. – Manhole 148 Project – Increase of $1,283.50 – due to final quantity reconciliations on project – Jason Dickman, Earles Engineering, Inc. informed the Commission that the increase is due to final quantity reconciliation amounts.

 

  1. Van Hoecke moved to approve Change Order #1 for Nowak Construction Co., Inc. for the Manhole 148 Project in the increased amount of $1,283.50. M. Wells seconded. All voted aye.

 

approved Change Order #1 for Nowak Construction Co., Inc. for the Manhole 148 Project in the increased amount of $1,283.50. 

 

  1. Consideration of Memorandum of Understanding between the City and Bourbon County for EMS – City Manager said that the MOU is before them.

 

Discussion was held on what is charged whether it is per hour or a percentage of time.

 

  1. Wells moved to approve the Memorandum of Understanding between the City and Bourbon County for EMS. K. Harrington seconded. J. Jones, T. Van Hoecke, M. Wells, and K. Harrington voted aye.  S. Walker abstained.  Motion carried 4-1.

 

APPROVED THE MEMORANDUM OF UNDERSTANDING BETWEEN THE CITY AND BOURBON COUNTY FOR EMS.

 

  1. Consideration of Bids for Demolition: City Manager said that there were two bids received.  The low bid is as follows for each structure:
    1. 731 S. Heylman – Dave’s Demolition – $1,100.00 – Skitch’s – $3,442.00
    2. 312 S. Heylman – Dave’s Demolition – $1,200.00 – Skitch’s – $4,939.00
    3. 1409 S. Ransom – Dave’s Demolition – $1,200.00 – Skitch’s – $3,439.00

 

Dave Saker said that he had Kevin Russell contact him about getting the rock from these demolitions.  He will remove it himself as he has a big hole he is wanting to fill.

 

City Manager said that he didn’t see any reason why he couldn’t have it.  It belongs to the contractor to dispose of.

 

Dave said that he will have all three structures removed within a five-day period.

 

  1. Van Hoecke moved to award all three demolitions to Dave’s Demolition. S. Walker seconded. All voted aye.

 

APPROVED TO AWARD THE DEMOLITION FOR 731 S. HEYLMAN IN THE AMOUNT OF $1,100.00 TO DAVE’S DEMOLITION; 312 S. HEYLMAN IN THE AMOUNT OF $1,200.00 TO DAVE’S DEMOLITION; AND 1409 S. RANSOM IN THE AMOUNT OF $1,200.00 TO DAVE’S DEMOLITION.

Reports and Comments:

 

  1. Commissioner Reports and Comments:

 

  1. City Manager Comments:

 

City Manager stated that he and the City Attorney are working on the Bourbon County R.E.D.I. and Tourism Ordinance update.

 

He stated that they are working on the Land Bank ordinance for mowing and well as preparing an ordinance for a separate fund for the Land Bank.

 

Josh said that his preference would be to move those funds to a Land Bank account so it can be tracked.

 

Rob said that there is a Land Bank meeting next week.

 

 

 

  1. Engineering Firm Comments:

 

  1. On-Call Sanitary Sewer Manhole Inspection Training Proposal – Jason Dickman, informed the Commission that this proposal is for the On-Call Sanitary Sewer Manhole Inspection in the amount of $6,500.00. They have been training City staff also on manhole inspections.

 

No action was taken on this item so it will be on the next agenda.

 

He stated that he is still looking for Memorial Hall plans.

 

Jason also updated on three other projects.  He also discussed Wall Street.  The Commission reminded him that they asked that an impact study be done for the businesses on Wall Street before the project proceeds further.

 

  1. Commissioners Reports and Comments:

 

  1. Van Hoecke – Tim welcomed Katie Harrington to the Commission. He remarked about the opening day at the Aquatic Center and social media comments.

 

Chief Shelton said that it was handled in house by H.R.

 

Tim commended all those involved with Good Ol’ Days – from the Committee to all the City crews.  He thanked all those involved with the parade and the vendors and the organizations that were on display.  He thanked Jackson Tough and Lindsay Madison also.  He thanked the citizens also for supporting this event.

 

Tim commended the Golf Course on the serving of food at the Golf Course now. This will be a great profit maker.

 

  1. Harrington – Katie stated that she attended the Good Ol’ Days parade and commended the City crews for their hard work for this event.

 

  1. Wells – Matthew thanked the City and Public Works crews on the extra hours worked for Good Ol’ Days. We are blessed to have these employees working for the City. He said that the Fort had some Native American dancers.  It was an awesome weekend all around.

 

Matthew asked about the electric hookups in the downtown area and upgrading them.

 

Matthew asked about the Codes Department and the creation of a Standard Operating Procedure.

 

City Manager is working on this still.

 

Matthew asked about Smart Growth America and if the City is still on board with this program and their ideas.  He said we need to address this.

 

Matthew asked about rewriting the boat license for the Lake residents.    He also asked about the rewriting of the ordinance for replacement of Commissioners.

 

City Attorney said that there are only two options:  leave it alone or pattern it after a couple of other ordinances.

 

Matthew asked for an update on the microphone system in the City Commission room so people can hear better.

 

Shane said that he is having issues getting proposals for it.  He has a bid from one company.

 

Matthew asked if Jason Dickman can look at Niece and the water issue.  He said that there are hydrants and signs with issues with tree and brush overgrowth.  He said that one is in the City and the other two are in the County.

 

Jason will look into this issue.

 

Matthew asked about adding an extra Land Bank member.

 

Tim said that they are working with Rob Harrington on this issue.  Their meeting is next week, and he doesn’t want to speak prematurely on this.

 

  1. Walker – Shane remarked that there were lots of vendors at Good Ol’ Days this year. He said that there were lots of people. He thanked the Police Officers and Dispatchers and Fire personnel for their assistance.

 

Shane asked if Jason and the City Manager had looked at 2nd and Judson.

 

Jason said that there are multiple items to be addressed at that location.

 

  1. Jones – Josh said that Cooper Street has started with concrete and looks good.

 

Josh stated that Pee Wee Button passed away. He served as a Firefighter for many years.

 

He thanked all the crews for their assistance in Good Ol’ Days.

 

Josh said that over $750.00 were sold in boat permits at Lake Fort Scott over Memorial Day weekend.

 

Josh asked Bob to look at Charter Ordinance No. 21 and if it still exists.

 

  1. City Attorney Comments – Nothing to report.

 

 

 

Adjournment:

 

  1. Van Hoecke moved to adjourn the meeting at 8:12 p.m. J. Jones seconded. All voted aye.

 

ADJOURNED MEETING AT 8:12 P.M.

 

Respectfully submitted,

 

 

Lisa Lewis

Deputy City Clerk

                                                                                                                                               

Agenda for the FS City Commission on June 21

                                                                                                                                               NOTICE OF AND AGENDA FOR
MEETING OF
FORT SCOTT CITY COMMISSION
CITY HALL  

CITY COMMISSION MEETING ROOM

123 SOUTH MAIN STREET
JUNE 21, 2022
6:00 P.M.

 

  1. Roll Call:

 

  1. Jones T. Van Hoecke S. Walker      M. Wells     K. Harrington
  2.      Flag Salute:
  • Invocation: Led by:  Pastor Brian Rhoades, Grace Baptist Tabernacle

 

  1. Consent Agenda:
  2. Approval of minutes of the regular meeting of June 7th, 2022.

 

  1. Approval of Appropriation Ordinance 1314-A totaling $636,669.88.

 

  1. Request to Pay – Earles Engineering & Inspection, Inc. (May Invoices)

Building Inspection                                  $   497.00

City Engineer                                          $4,120.00

Ft. Scott System Design                         $11,500.00

Cooper St Inspection                                $2,671.75

On Call Project Engineer                         $   172.00

Manhole 148 Design                                $     71.00

Total                    $19,031.75

 

  1. Request to Pay – Nuss & Farmer, P.A. – May invoice – $1,330.00

 

  1. Request to Pay – Skitch’s Hauling & Excavation, Inc. – May Invoice – $3,510.00

 

  1. Request to Pay – HDR Engineering, Inc. – River Intake/Dam Improvement – $2,797.50 – Engineering

 

  1. Request to Pay #4 – Mid-Continental Restoration Co., Inc. – Hammon’s building – $15,511.15

 

  1. Request to Pay #4 – Mid-Continental Restoration Co., Inc. – Sharky’s building – $24,517.60

 

  1. Request to Pay #5 – Mid-Continental Restoration Co., Inc. – Hammon’s building – $21,817.74

 

  1. Request to Pay #5 – Mid-Continental Restoration Co., Inc. – Sharky’s building – $20,179.63

 

  1. Parade Permit – Burke Street Parade – July 4th, 2022

 

  1. Consideration of Cereal Malt Beverage License – 17 S. Main – Samurai Hibachi and Sushi LLC

 

  1. May financials (will be on table)

 

  1. Public Comment:

(Sign up required. Comments on any topic not on agenda and limited to five (5) minutes per person, at Commission discretion)

 

  1. Old Business:

 

  1. Request to Pay – Bourbon County R.E.D.I. Tourism Marketing Budget – $39,650.00
  2. Consideration of deannexation of the property more commonly known as 2142 Jayhawk Road – Approval of Ordinance No. 3611

 

  • Appearances: Bob Reed – Temporary Street Closure – 20th to 23rd – Huntington – July 18th – July 22nd, 2022

 

Burke Street – 10th and Burke – July 4th, 2022 – Burke Street Celebration

 

Rob Harrington – Industrial Park Road Discussion

 

Lake Advisory Board

 

  • Public Hearing: None

 

  1. New Business:

 

  1. Consideration of appointment to Parks Advisory Board
  2. Consideration of Corporate Golf Rate Season Membership
  3. Consideration of Change Order #3 – Hammon’s – $2,933.00

 

  1.    Reports and Comments:
  2. City Manager Comments: Cooper Street Update

Street Crew Update

 

  1. Director Comments: Doug Guns – Lake Fort Scott Update

Bill Downey – Codes Update

 

  1. City Engineer Report:

 

  1. On-Call Sanitary Sewer Manhole Inspection Training Proposal
  2. Phase 1 – Aerator – Sewer Plant

 

  1. Commissioners Reports and Comments:
  2.   City Attorney Reports and Comments:
  3. Executive Session – If requested, (please follow script in all motions for Executive Sessions)

(City Manager – Attorney/Client Privilege)

XII.          Adjournment:

 

 

Deceased Man Is Presumed to Be Derrick Johnson

The Fort Scott Police Department electric sign. The department is located at 1604 S. National Avenue.

Yesterday, 6/16/22, the body of a deceased male individual was located in the northern end of Gunn Park, near the  Marmaton River.   The deceased is now presumed to be 40 year old, Derrick Wayne Johnson of Fort Scott.

 

Confirmation of identity as well as cause of death will be determined by an impending autopsy, which is scheduled for Sunday, June 19th, 2022.

 

This investigation is on-going.  Official updates will be released as we are able.

 

Our thoughts and prayers are with the Johnson family.

 

Sergeant Bill Downey

Public Information Officer

A Death In Gunn Park is Still Under Investigation

On June 16, 2022 at approximately 10:45 a.m., members of the Fort Scott Fire Department, Fort Scott Police Department, Bourbon County Sheriff’s Office, and EMS responded to a report of a possible deceased individual in the woods at Gunn Park in the west part of the city, according to the FSPD Facebook page.
A deceased individual was subsequently located in the northern end of the park, near the river. The cause of death is currently under investigation. The name of the deceased individual is being withheld until the next of kin can be notified.
“We are currently waiting on the autopsy results to make a positive identification on this person,” said Sergeant Bill Downey FSPD Public Information Officer.

Respond to Employee and Resident Survey: To View Future Employment Needs

EMPLOYEE & RESIDENT SURVEY

FORT SCOTT – BOURBON COUNTY AREA

Calling all young adults ages 18 to 29!

YOUR RESPONSE IS APPRECIATED!

Do you work in Bourbon County? Do you live in Bourbon County? Either way or both, we want your thoughts about work and education. Our Chamber is assisting Bourbon County Regional Economic Inc on its workforce assessment. A few weeks ago, we asked for input from company leaders. Now, we want to know what employees and residents think. Even if you are not currently employed we want to know what you think. This survey only takes about five minutes and is completely confidential.

Thank you!

The Chamber is sending in

partnership with Bourbon County REDI

Greetings!

RE: Calling all young adults from 18 to 29 years of age – Your Response is Appreciated!

Young adults from the ages of 18 to 29 represent our future and we need your input on workforce, jobs and training opportunities. Did you know that your age groups (nationally) are the least likely to engage in a survey and yet YOUR input is the most important as we plan for the future.

The Chamber is supporting our economic development entity, Bourbon County Regional Economic Development, Inc, in gathering information on what you think about your jobs, your training and what you want as a future career. This is done with an on-line survey and only takes about FIVE MINUTES.  Your thoughts are really important. Take the survey today!

Please pass this along to family, friends, employees, co-workers, and others. The more input we get, the better. Bourbon County REDI and the Chamber need your help to make sure we keep good jobs in the area.

You will find the survey here:

https://www.surveymonkey.com/r/BourbonCountyResidentSurvey

Again, your input is very critical to ensuring REDI and the Chamber have a good view of the current and future employment needs.  Please take the survey today.

*PLEASE NOTE that we would like all ages of residents to take the survey, but we would like to particularly get a good representation of the 18-29 age group.  Your assistance is appreciated.

Thank you!

Halle Striler

Communications & Events Coordinator

Fort Scott Area Chamber of Commerce

IF YOU HAVE ALREADY COMPLETED THE SURVEY,

WE THANK YOU FOR YOUR RESPONSE

& PARTICIPATION!

Thank you to our Chamber Champions listed below.

Chamber Champions Logo Image 2022 - Ledger Size.png
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Fort Scott Area Chamber of Commerce | 231 E. Wall Street, Fort Scott, KS 66701

FSHS All Classes Reunion June 24-26

The FSHS All Classes Reunion
is coming next weekend,
June 24th-26th!
(The Chamber encourages all locals to be ready to welcome alumni home by making sure the area around your
business and residence is spruced up and welcoming!)
See below for the full schedule of events for the
all-class activities, then many individual classes
have their own events planned, too!
TODAY is the last day to purchase Chicken Dinner tix,
see below.
LAST CALL!
Today is the last day to purchase chicken dinner tickets for the
All Classes Reunion.
Schedule of events below.
Fort Scott High School
All Classes Reunion Schedule
June 24-26th, 2022
Friday, June 24th
Registration
Friday, June 24th | 9am-4pm
FSHS Gym
Reunion Parade
Friday, June 24th
Starts at 5pm
Click here to enter parade.
Chicken Dinner
Friday, June 24th, 6pm
FSHS Commons Area
The All-Star Reunion Band
Friday, June 24th | 8pm-12am
The Liberty Theatre
*Cash Bar Only
Saturday, June 25th
Registration
Saturday, June 25th | 9am-12pm
FSHS Gym
Luncheon for Classes 1950 & Earlier
Saturday, June 25th | 11:30am
FSHS Commons Area
Teacher Reception
Saturday, June 25th | 3-5pm
FSHS Commons Area
Rock Sanctuary & Bourbon County Revival
Saturday, June 25th | 8pm
Liberty Theatre
*Cash bar only
The Crayons
60’s-70’s Era Band
Saturday, June 25th | 8pm
Skubitz Plaza
The Stolen Winnebago’s
80’s-90’s Era Band
Saturday, June 25th | 8pm
3rd & Main
REMINDER: NO GLASS CONTAINERS DOWNTOWN, PLEASE –
WHEN YOU ARE DOWNTOWN FOR VARIOUS EVENTS!
Thank you to our Chamber Champions listed below!

Noble Health: History of Failed Health Care For Patients

Sara Jane Tribble, a journalist from Kaiser Health News, visited Fort Scott following the closure of Mercy Hospital and wrote a comprehensive story on the impact to the community.

She sent this story to fortscott.biz, just completed, on Noble Health that is a contender corporation for reopening a hospital in Fort Scott, at the former Mercy site.

Buy and Bust: When Private Equity Comes for Rural Hospitals

MEXICO, Mo. — When the new corporate owners of two rural hospitals suddenly announced they would stop admitting patients one Friday in March, Kayla Schudel, a nurse, stood resolute in the nearly empty lobby of Audrain Community Hospital: “You’ll be seen; the ER is open.”

The hospital — with 40 beds and five clinics — typically saw 24 to 50 emergency room cases a day, treating patients from the surrounding 1,000-plus acre farms and tiny no-stoplight towns, she said. She wouldn’t abandon them.

A week later Noble Health had the final word: It locked the doors.

Noble, a three-year-old startup that acquired Audrain and nearby Callaway Community Hospital, offered explanations on social media, including “a technology issue” and a need to “restructure their operations” to keep the hospitals financially viable.

The company should have had plentiful resources to keep them afloat: Noble was launched in late 2019 by Nueterra Capital, a venture capital and private equity firm that has raised millions of dollars to back dozens of health care companies, according to Nueterra’s portfolio and federal filings.

What’s more, in addition to Medicare and Medicaid funds, Noble had received nearly $20 million in federal covid relief money in the 18 months before it closed the hospitals — funds whose use is still not fully accounted for.

Private equity investors, with their focus on buying cheap and reaping quick returns, are moving voraciously into the U.S. health care system; investments increased twentyfold from 2000 to 2018, and have only accelerated since. Financially distressed rural hospitals like Audrain are targets, putting vulnerable communities at the mercy of firms whose North Star is profit, rather than patient health. A recent report found that 441, more than 20%, were at risk of closing or losing services.

The saga that followed Noble into these towns may well serve as a warning flare from the rolling wheat and corn fields between Kansas City and St. Louis.

Noble acquired the hospitals after charming local leaders desperate to save beloved local institutions. And federal regulators did nothing to block or thoroughly vet the acquisition, despite red flags.

Noble’s directors had little health care experience. The one who did was Donald R. Peterson, whose previous foray into the space, an infusion company, ended with charges of Medicare fraud. Just months later, he became one of two directors of Noble, along with Nueterra’s chairman, Daniel R. Tasset, according to a state filing.

In an emailed response to questions from KHN, Peterson said the startup was meant to do good: “We created Noble to save a rural hospital that was about to close.” Tasset could not be reached for comment.

Audrain had struggled before Noble came calling, said Dr. Joe Corrado, a longtime surgeon at the hospital: On an average day in 2019, 40% of beds were empty, as more treatments moved to the outpatient setting and some patients drove an hour to larger hospitals for specialty care.

Things grew worse rather than better under the new private equity owners, according to Corrado as well as state and federal documents, gained through months of public records requests, and dozens of interviews with community leaders, health officials, and residents.

Once Noble owned Callaway and Audrain, the hospitals stopped paying their bills, according to lawsuits filed by contract nurses, security guards, and others. Inspection reports from the state workers coordinating with the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services were alarming, listing 135 pages of deficiencies that put patients “at risk for their health and safety.”

Corrado saw his hospital being whittled away. Supplies for surgery disappeared, crucial medicines went unstocked, paychecks never came, he said. Just days before Noble suspended operations, he told management: “We don’t have the ability to do the things we need to take care of patients.”

When state health department surveyors arrived at the Callaway hospital in late summer 2021, only three patients remained, all in the geriatric psychiatry unit.

Inspectors reported they witnessed a suicidal 77-year-old stab her own leg with an ink pen, that an 85-year-old missed his medicine over the weekend because a pharmacist was unavailable, and that nurses waited five minutes to provide oxygen after surgery because the machine malfunctioned.

Ambar La Forgia, a Columbia University assistant professor who studies private equity in health care, said the business model, in general, is “all about creating short-term returns for shareholders.” The emphasis on profit, she said, is “not necessarily great for the patient.”

That, La Forgia said, raises hard questions for rural America: “Is a bad hospital better than no hospital?” And how should federal regulators who approve hospital purchases and monitor their performance thread that needle?

Hospitals Hollowed Out of Drugs, Supplies, and Salaries

Audrain was once a 247-bed regional destination for care, with more than 4,300 admissions in 1992, according to a county bond report. Internal medicine doctors, orthopedic surgeons, and pulmonologists competed to admit the most patients.

By 2019 it was a shadow of that former self. Yet patients like Dee Tate, diagnosed with cancer in 2020, relied on it. She got blood tests, scans, port placement, and chemotherapy to put her into remission — all at Audrain.

So she was shocked when her oncologist, Dr. Shahid Waheed, told Tate he couldn’t perform her scheduled infusion this January.

“If I don’t take this treatment, the likeliness of this kind of cancer coming back goes way, way up,” she said.

The medication, Rituxan, was not in short supply nationally. Noble could not stock it because the hospital purchasing department did not have the money for it, according to a former hospital employee who spoke on condition of anonymity. Ultimately, the person said, the staff bought it directly from the supplier.

Tate’s infusion was five weeks late. “It came from Indiana,” she recalled. Tate, along with about 500 other patients, now must travel at least 40 miles for cancer care.

In the operating suite, Corrado said he could never be sure supplies like anesthesia medicines, bandages, and catheters would be available for surgeries, from mastectomies to emergency appendectomies.

Management determined who would be paid on a week-by-week basis, he said: “On one Friday, they would pay the employees, and they couldn’t buy anything else. And another week they would be able to maybe buy supplies.”

Money troubles were not new to the hospitals. Despite federal subsidies, rural hospitals often struggle because their patients tend to be on Medicare or Medicaid or have no insurance, providing less revenue than commercial insurance.

The year before Noble bought Audrain, the hospital reported an $18 million loss for patient services on $44 million in patient revenue. The Callaway hospital had eked out a $170,000 profit from patient care while still owned and operated by Nueterra.

The next year, under Noble’s management, Callaway reported a nearly $6 million loss on patient services, its 2020 Medicare cost report showed. On paper, financial filings show, it had spent 43% more than the year before.

But much of the money was not spent on delivering health care, said Ge Bai, a professor of accounting at Johns Hopkins Carey Business School, who reviewed Callaway’s most recent Medicare cost reports for KHN. She noted that the hospital received millions in covid relief that it reported as miscellaneous income.

The hospital’s spending on laboratory, medical supplies, contract nursing, and care all increased, as is expected in a pandemic, Bai said. But she questioned other line-item cost increases.

For example, spending on the non-salaried employee benefits climbed 273%, to $1.4 million. Callaway’s 18-bed hospital nearly doubled its spending on administration, adding $1.1 million in fees paid to Nueterra subsidiaries NueHealth and Noble in 2020. The hospital also paid Noble a $38,000 lease in 2020, a statement filed with Callaway County showed.

“These dramatic increases raise a red flag,” Bai said. “To whom did the money go?”

Noble executives repeatedly declined requests for comment or interviews to clarify such questions. In late March, Noble spokesperson Nancy Mays said they did not have time to answer questions because they were “talking to potential buyers and figuring out how to best serve employees right now.”

A Sales Pitch Heavy on Charm

Audrain County officials were easy prey for investors. Noble was the only bidder for the failing hospital, said Lou Leonatti, the longtime local attorney, and many in Mexico, a town of 11,000 and the county seat, “believed we were saved.”

Dana Keller, the head of Mexico’s Chamber of Commerce who felt a hospital was essential to keeping business in town, said she set up meetings so Noble’s executives could “talk about their philosophy for rural health care.”

Leaders who called themselves “Progress Mexico” tried to evaluate the startup. “At the time we looked at it, Nueterra had an ownership interest, Don Peterson had an ownership interest, Drew Solomon, and Tom Carter,” Leonatti said.

But there was much they didn’t know or overlooked. None of Noble’s three founding owners had run a hospital or navigated its regulatory demands. Only Peterson — a serial entrepreneur who spent decades investing in workstation and information technology businesses — had worked briefly in health care, and that ended badly.

In 2012, he created IVXpress, now called IVX Health, with infusion centers in 10 states. Peterson left IVX in 2018 after a whistleblower accused him of altering claims, faking drug purchases, and paying a doctor kickbacks. Peterson settled the resulting Medicare fraud charges with the U.S. Health and Human Services’ Office of Inspector General without admitting wrongdoing.

Such OIG settlements are “in essence the federal government saying that we don’t trust you,” said Robert Salcido, an attorney who specializes in health care fraud.

Jeff Morris, Peterson’s attorney, said in a letter to KHN: Peterson’s five-year voluntary “exclusion applies to health care programs only, this precludes him from making any claim to funds allocated by federal health care programs for services — including administrative and management services — ordered, prescribed or furnished by Mr. Peterson.”

Morris said Peterson had been “diligent in complying with his exclusion,” which began Aug. 5, 2019. Peterson agreed to pay $334,800 in restitution. According to the terms, violating the agreement could bring criminal prosecution and as much as $4.5 million in penalties.

Within months of the settlement, Peterson signed Noble’s filing to register in Missouri as a director — as well as its secretary, vice president, and assistant treasurer. In April 2020, he ordered medical supplies for the Callaway hospital, according to a receipt obtained through a public records request.

Pandemic Relief and Unpaid Bills

As in much of rural America, the pandemic was slow to emerge in Callaway and Audrain counties, but covid-19 cases were climbing by fall 2020. The hospitals hired contract nurses for help and when possible transferred patients to larger, urban areas.

Callaway saw a surge in late 2020 and closed its general inpatient care in January 2021. Audrain, the larger hospital, dealt with a surge of daily cases in that span.

Noble pursued all forms of coronavirus-related funding. On its watch, Callaway and Audrain hospitals attested to receiving about $11 million in federal relief, which rolled out after the Coronavirus Aid, Relief, and Economic Security Act was enacted in March 2020. Noble’s hospitals also took in $4.8 million in loans from the federal Paycheck Protection Program that have been forgiven.

Hospital cost reports from 2020 indicate that the millions should have helped: Audrain’s health care staffing costs were $3.5 million, and Callaway’s were $562,000.

Noble also turned to state and local officials. Missouri distributed $1.1 million to Noble from its CARES funding, mostly to Callaway for covid testing.

Callaway County drew from two of its own federal allocations for the hospital. As of February, leaders had approved more than $14,000 for covid testing, funded by the American Rescue Plan Act. In addition, invoices provided through a public records request show that the county used CARES Act funding to pay Noble’s hospital nearly $364,000 for covid testing, operations, and marketing.

Noble sought Audrain County’s help last fall to pay contract nurses after pandemic costs soared. Its commissioners approved a one-year $1.8 million loan using ARPA money. The loan is due in September, at a 2.5% interest rate. If Noble defaults, the rate climbs to 5%.

Even as the hospitals looked flush with federal money, contractors were pulling out, according to lawsuits that allege more than $2 million in unpaid bills.

In one suit filed April 21, Moberly Anesthesia Associates said the Audrain hospital failed to pay nearly $214,000 for services provided.

Among other lawsuits:

Noble Health executives Carter and Solomon declined to comment on the lawsuits.

Nueterra Capital CEO Jeremy Tasset, the son of Daniel Tasset, said in a March email that “we are a minority investor in the real estate and have nothing to do with the operations of the hospitals.”

Callaway County records show Noble owes more than $72,000 in unpaid property taxes and penalties.

Audrain and Callaway counties’ records confirm that Noble kept hospital operations and real estate assets separate — a common move, experts said, from the private equity playbook, when profits are expected from property value rather than medicine.

Said Rosemary Batt, a management professor at Cornell University: “That’s a tipoff that they must be doing something to monetize the real estate to make money.”

Patients ‘At Risk for Their Health and Safety’

Eileen O’Grady, research manager at the nonprofit Private Equity Stakeholder Project, said private equity’s focus on strong, speedy returns makes it a risky business model for health care. “In rural hospitals,” O’Grady said, “there are very few ways” to boost revenue and cut expenses “without having an impact on patient care.”

Indeed, by late summer 2021, federal and state inspectors found alarming deficiencies at the Callaway hospital and gave Noble 23 days to fix them.

Noble took some corrective actions, so inspectors cleared the hospital to admit patients and receive funding. But it was not exactly a clean bill of health.

The September checklist of deficiencies spanned 16 pages, compared with 135 the month before. Some lapses, such as not staffing an overnight ER doctor, were unaddressed.

At the Audrain hospital, inspectors found “ineffective management.” Its electronic medical record system did not keep patient information. Its behavioral health staff did not retain records or footage of an alleged patient assault, and inspectors found long electrical cords next to beds, a risk for strangulation.

Meanwhile, the three men who ran Noble were shopping for more hospitals to buy.

Solomon and Carter pitched Noble’s services to officials in Fort Scott, Kansas, whose hospital had closed in 2018. City and county leaders on July 23, 2021, paid $1 million from their American Rescue Plan Act funds for Noble to study the feasibility of reopening. The money was paid to a new company Peterson founded in June, Access Medical Advisors.

Solomon, president of Noble’s real estate company, told the county in late March of an “incredible” finding from the study — Fort Scott’s hospital building was worth $19.6 million, which “could present the borrowing basis or the bonding basis for a really great viable community project to move forward.”

Solomon’s discovery came as Noble’s hospitals in Missouri remained closed, staffers looked for new jobs, and patients traveled even farther for care.

It came as Noble Health appeared to be unraveling. In late March and April, the Kansas City attorney who registered the company, its hospitals, its real estate entities, and Access Medical Advisors — Philip Krause — informed state officials he had resigned his positions with all of them.

Peterson’s LinkedIn page said he has retired from Noble Health. In March he incorporated a new company, Noble Health Services, based at his home address — a half-million-dollar brick colonial in a leafy Kansas City suburb. Its purpose: “healthcare administrative services.”

As for Noble’s failed hospitals, Texas-based Platinum Team Management executive Cory Countryman said it would buy and reopen them. “We have equity investors,” said his colleague Melissa Upshaw, as well as “traditional financing” and “a portfolio of our own.” Countryman does have recent health care experience: In 2017, as CEO, he abruptly shut down Walnut Hill hospital in Dallas.

KHN (Kaiser Health News) is a national newsroom that produces in-depth journalism about health issues. Together with Policy Analysis and Polling, KHN is one of the three major operating programs at KFF (Kaiser Family Foundation). KFF is an endowed nonprofit organization providing information on health issues to the nation.

Some elements may be removed from this article due to republishing restrictions. If you have questions about available photos or other content, please contact [email protected].

Chamber Coffee at The Lavender Patch Farm June 16

JOIN US FOR THIS WEEK’S

CHAMBER COFFEE

Hosted by The Lavender Patch Farm

Thursday, June 16th, 8am

2376 Locust Rd.

 

The Fort Scott Area Chamber of Commerce invites members and guests to a Chamber Coffee hosted by The Lavender Patch Farm, Thursday, June 16th at 8 a.m., 2376 Locust Road.

Owners Davin and Betsy Reichard will be promoting the 5th Annual Lavender Fest which is planned for this Saturday, June 18th from 9 a.m. to 3:00 p.m.  The Trolley will will provide complimentary transportation to and from the festival this Saturday, leaving from the Chamber of Commerce, on the hour starting at 9 a.m. and returning from The Lavender Patch on the half-hour with the last departure back to the Chamber at 2:30 p.m.

 

Festival activities will include tours of the lavender, lavender craft demonstrations, live music, games, children’s activities, an opportunity to buy lunch of Herb de Provence pulled pork sandwiches and lavender lemonade and visiting the gift shop. In addition, there will be lavender plants for sale at the festival. Admission is $5 for 13 years or older.

The Lavender Patch and its gift shop are open Thursday through Monday from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. in the month of June and Friday through Monday from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. in the month of July. The farm and gift shop is also open by appointment. More information about the business, events and schedules may be found on their Facebook page or website, www.thelavenderpatchfarm.com.

 Visit The Lavender Patch Farm’s Facebook page here. 

Visit The Lavender Patch Farm’s Website here.

News Release from USD 234

NEWS RELEASE

 

Monday, June 13, 2022

 

Members of the USD 234 Board of Education met at their offices on Monday, June 13, 2022, for their regular monthly meeting.

President James Wood opened the meeting.  The board approved the official agenda.  The board also approved the consent agenda:

 

A.    Minutes

B.    Bills and Claims

C.    Payroll – May 20, 2022 – $1,554,551.40

D.    Financial Report

E.     Activity fund accounts­­­­­­

F.     Fundraiser applications

G.    Extended trip applications

H.    Site Council reports

I.      2022-23 Site Council members; dates and times of meetings

J.      2021-22 Gifts

K.    Point of Information – Special Board Meeting – June 21 – 5:30 p.m – Budget hearing

 

Mike Trim, SRO Officer, spoke in the public forum section of the meeting.  Dalaina Smith, Academic Director; and Gina Shelton, Board Clerk/Finance Director, shared reports with board members.

 

The board approved the following

·       Renewal of property, general liability, employment, cyber, and automobile insurance with KERMP

·       Computer pre-bid purchase

·       2022-23 MAP renewal for math, reading, and science

·       Eureka math proposal

·       PLC Professional Development proposal for 2022-23

·       1,116-hour calendar for the 2022-23 school year

·       KASB Board Policy updates

 

The board tabled approval of handbooks.  The board reviewed the Last Day Enrollment Count report.  Board members shared comments and then went into an executive session to discuss employer-employee negotiations.  The board returned to open session and then went into executive session to discuss personnel matters for nonelected personnel.  The board returned to open meeting and approved ratification of the 2022-23 negotiated agreement, Resolution 21-14 – final action on the nonrenewal of a teacher’s contract, and the following employment matters:

 

a.      Retirement of Sue Ann Fredericksen, high school special education teacher, effective July 1, 2022

b.     Resignation of Lora Jett as a high school English teacher for the 2022-23 school year

c.      Resignation of Angelica Gonzales, middle school paraprofessional, effective at the end of the 2021-22 school year

d.     Resignation of Sarah Long as a high school paraprofessional for the 2022-23 school year

e.      Fort Scott Middle School content positions for 2022-23

f.      Resignation of Andon Prestley, Eugene Ware paraprofessional, effective at the end of the 2021-22 school year

g.     Transfer of Moriah Dillow, Winfield Scott focus room teacher, to Winfield Scott kindergarten teacher for the 2022-23 school year

h.     Transfer of John Metcalf, middle school Student Success Center teacher, to middle school elective teacher for the 2022-23 school year

i.       Transfer of Brendon Blackburn, middle school elective teacher, to middle school Student Success Center teacher for the 2022-23 school year

j.       Leave of absence request from Peyton Guiles, Eugene Ware special education teacher

k.     Clarification for Assistant Superintendent position

l.       Change in work agreement for Rhonda Dawson, high school activities secretary/district treasurer, and Angie DeLaTorre, high school secretary/registrar for the 2022-23 school year

m.   Addition of a district ESOL Coordinator for the 2022-23 school year

n.     Employment of Sarah Hendricks as a Eugene Ware fourth grade teacher for the 2022-23 school year

o.     Employment of Samantha Short as a middle school teacher for the 2022-23 school year

p.     Employment of Michael Krull as a high school physical education teacher and head boys’ basketball coach for the 2022-23 school year

q.     Employment of Chad Ruddick as a high school English teacher for the 2022-23 school year

r.      Employment of Sarah Shaw as a preschool paraprofessional for the 2022-23 school year

s.      Employment of central office classified personnel for the 2022-23 school year

t.       Employment of technology classified personnel for the 2022-23 school year

u.     Employment of food service classified personnel for the 2022-23 school year

v.     Employment of transportation classified personnel for the 2022-23 school year

w.    Employment of maintenance classified personnel for the 2022-23 school year

x.     Employment of Fort Scott High School classified personnel for the 2022-23 school year

y.     Employment of Fort Scott Middle School classified personnel for the 2022-23 school year

z.      Employment of Eugene Ware classified personnel for the 2022-23 school year

aa.   Employment of Winfield Scott classified personnel for the 2022-23 school year

bb.  Employment of Fort Scott Preschool Center classified personnel for the 2022-23 school year

cc.   Employment of district supplemental personnel for the 2022-23 school year

dd.  Employment of Fort Scott High School supplemental personnel for the 2022-23 school year

ee.   Employment of Fort Scott Middle School supplemental personnel for the 2022-23 school year

ff.    Employment of Eugene Ware supplemental personnel for the 2022-23 school year

gg.  Employment of Fort Scott Preschool Center supplemental personnel for the 2022-23 schoolyear

hh.  Resignation of Whitley Chesney as the director of the high school musical, effective at the end of the 2021-22 school year

ii.     Rescinded resignation from Elizabeth Rose, preschool paraprofessional

jj.     Transfer of Elizabeth Rose, preschool paraprofessional, to high school paraprofessional for the 2022-23 school year

kk.  Transfer of Dixie Jackson, high school paraprofessional, to a 12-month custodian position for the 2022-23 school year

ll.     Employment of Anthony Ogle as a 12-month custodian for the 2022-23 school year

mm.        Transfer of Nick Johnson, middle school teacher, to Fort Scott Preschool Principal for the 2022-23 school year, and the resignation of Nick Johnson as a middle school assistant football and middle school assistant basketball coach for the 2022-23 school year

 

The board adjourned

 

Bourbon County Local News